Showing posts with label driving the impossible. Show all posts
Showing posts with label driving the impossible. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

The Longest Day… (so far) - Day 19 Almaty to Shymkent

SEPTEMBER 28TH, 2010


Peking to Paris Motor Challenge update. More about the race here


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John Dickinson and Charles McGowan negotiate the horror potholes in their Bentley Tourer

It’s been the longest day so far, with 730 kilometres covered since 6.0am this morning, a necessity because of the shortage of hotels that are able to accommodate the whole rally. We have now arrived in Shymkent, in the south of Kazakhstan, and the rally is split over two hotels in the centre of town. Tomorrow is considerably shorter, at just over 200 kms, but we have to cross the border into Uzbekistan to reach Tashkent, which will no doubt prove a time-consuming hassle.

With two days of fettling during the Almaty rest-days, the majority started off today fighting fit, even Tim Scott on the 1923 FN motorcycle was chuffing well, setting out in darkness before everyone else.


Most crews have arrived very tired, but pleased with themselves, the crew of Car 6, the 14-litre La France, has had a steady run but they have had a string of suspension problems, all four springs have broken twice and one spring has broken four times. But today has proved to be a good steady run.


The route today has been all tarmac, but did include one horror section of some 20 kms of very vicious pot-holes, some eight or nine inches deep lined with very sharp edges, just the sort of thing that destroys wheel bearings if hit too hard. That has been the problem for the Bolsovers, in the Chevy, who spent the two days off trying to sort a wheel bearing problem – several cars suffered wheel-bearing problems through not being greased up before the start with water-proof grease.


Nigel Gambier and Hugo Upton were in trouble with their Lagonda, this time with spark plugs and engine-timing issues – the manifolds are lagged with asbestos tape and its only a matter of time before it follows the example of the Lagondas on the last Peking to Paris and has the manifold burnt through and full of holes due to the extreme heat of long hot days. The Lagonda of the Luns has avoided this tweak, but they are suffering with broken engine-mounts.


The ’39 Chevrolet two-seater open Special of Doug Mackinnon and Anastasia Karavaeva have had the advantage of the co-driver speaking fluent Russian, it’s been handy as the car has been in difficulties after the first day. After a broken axle, the car was in the Red Scorpion Garage in Almaty for a day of repairs but today the axle broke a second time, early on this morning, and the car now appears doomed.


Martin and Olivia Hunt in Car 63, a 1927 Bentley Le Mans, hit a lamb crossing the road, the sheep picked itself up and ran off remarkably unscathed, the car is going well but has suffered six punctures so far.


Nicholas Pryor and Lesley Stockwell in the ’62 Volvo PV544 which they were assured was prepared along the lines of the car that took Joginder Singh to victory on the Safari Rally has suffered more problems, this time more minor, however, having had to borrow some wire to lash up their exhaust… a lot of cars are now having exhaust problems through lack of flexibility, a basic rally-mod.


Hugh Bishop came into the hotel just as it was turning dark this evening feeling relieved, as the 1925 Vauxhall 30-98 has poor lights and was lost time during the day with electrical bothers, eventually sorted by Simon Ayris as nothing more tricky than a loose wire to the coil.


Marco Rollinger and Viviane Biel from Luxembourg have retired their ’27 Bentley Le Mans, and are now out of the competition, but are touring down the route to Paris having flown in their Lancia Aurelia B20.


Car 77, the Dodge of Vilnis Husko and James Kabrich has retired, and the crew are now travelling in the Subaru which has been bought by the crew of the Ford Model B, Car 33, who are are now touring down the route.


Tomorrow offers another border and another country.

Sunday, September 26, 2010

From Campsite to Comfort... Day 16 Usharal to Almaty

SEPTEMBER 25TH, 2010



Peking to Paris Motor Challenge update. More about the race here


[[MORE]]


Bruce Selbie and Bruce Washington - Rolls Royce 20/25

It promised to be an uneventful day… all that was necessary was to drive a main-road route of some 500 kms to Almaty, and after a night of camping in a field, bask in a warm soapy bath of the Almaty Intercontinental. Nothing, however, goes to plan – it wouldn’t qualify as an adventure if it did so.

Dick Disaster, however, is a constant riding companion. Car 22, the 1922 “Bonnie and Clyde” Chevrolet Roadster of David Clements and Russell Stevenson, burst into flames yesterday. The crew jumped out but were unable to rescue their bags of personal possessions. They lost everything except their passports as they watched the car turned to a pile of ashes.


The dark red Alfa of Alastair Caldwell and Catriona Rings pulled up in front of the glass revolving doors to unload their luggage, still with two spare wheels on the plastic see-through home-made hardtop, but now looking rather the worse for wear. There are large “lumps” appearing in the alloy wings from the battering of stones – the inner wings have no protection – and the car had been mighty sick of late, first with muck in the petrol tank giving acceleration of a kangaroo quality, and then more worrying, a wheel-bearing failure provided an added headache. This was cured by drilling holes in a wheel-spinner to turn it into a hub puller in order to replace the offending item with a spare carried in the tiny boot. The driver has looked worried and totally unapproachable for days, is now cheerful again, after a spot of encouragement from Peter Banham.


Here’s a run-down of what we have heard from crews on arrival here in Almaty: Car 43, Jorg Lemberg and Rene Mueller, in a Lagonda, report a failed head-gasket, but reckon they are going to sort this themselves; Car 9, the Dodge Tourer of Jeff Robinson and Rob Blake, is to sort out a duff bearing in the generator; Car 38, the Alvis of the Wilkinson’s, has a leaky radiator and a jammed starter-motor due to too much sand; Car 70, the Dodge of Bill Shields and Daniel Day, has a broken engine mount and needs a new steering arm; Car 11, the Vauxhall of Max Stephenson and Carl Watson, reports a minor oil leak and problems with the starter-motor, “otherwise everything is happy,” and Car 76 David Smith and Anne Marie Smith, in a La Salle, have a noisy clutch release bearing; and the Hickling’s MG SA has a cracked differential, and the radiator has a fan blade stuck in it… (that’s been a common problem).
Driving the Impossible


Alex Howard and Dominic Collins - Rolls Royce Phantom II

Car 75, the Bolsover’s Chevy, needs a change of a half shaft and repairs to a cracked radiator; the La France, Car 6, is sorting a holed radiator and a broken spring; the Rolls Phantom of Alex Howard and Dominic Collins, in a Rolls Phantom, has a broken fan, slipping clutch, dodgy brakes, the running boards are falling off, and no lights; Car 101, the Holden of Frank Bird and Ross Oakman, say they have had no problems since Ulaan Bataar when they fitted a new camshaft.

All seem optimistic of running repairs as we are here for the next two days, and after a spot of fettling in the network of workshops here will be back on the road again, fighting-fit.


The Peking to Paris is surely all about the masochism of a faithful re-enactment of the kind of hardship, endurance, and test of tenacity that the pioneers of 1907 displayed on the world’s first ever inter-Continental rally, and most crews are stuck into the spirit of things, knowing that surely when it comes to the pain-threshold, nothing could get much tougher than this, and with no back-up when things go wrong. However, this column can exclusively reveal that there is another side to life on the Peking to Paris.


How about this – we understand that a private plane was chartered to enable a bunch of competitors to fly into Almaty from Semey. Our sleuth reckons the culprits, who explain themselves by the need to either get to the hotel first in order to bag the Penthouse Suite, or, ensure a workshop is lined up to work on their car before everyone else, (traditional Terry Thomas regulations being applied here), called up a private aircraft. Well, you could not make this up… a plane load of rally-crews with cars that have spent a great deal of time crossing whole countries on the back of trucks have arrived here as the rally jet-set. We are reliably informed they are crews of Cars 31, 29, 89, 99, 43, and 56, and so large was this bunch, the pilot had to be persuaded to take a few on one opening leg, and then return to pick up the rest, so twice flying what the rest have driven the hard way… Cheating? How could the rule-makers possibly have forseen such cunning initiative as this?


Yep, you couldn’t make it up. Must go… the bubble-bath is over-flowing.